Document Actions

BC’s forests: Full decade of carbon loss

For a full decade, B.C. forests have been releasing dramatically more carbon into the atmosphere than they have absorbed out of the atmosphere.

Vancouver Island clearcuts - Photo by TJ Watt

For a full decade, B.C. forests have been releasing dramatically more carbon into the atmosphere than they have absorbed out of the atmosphere.

An eye-opening new analysis of B.C. government data by Sierra Club BC shows that our forests emitted 256 tonnes of carbon dioxide between 2003 and 2012. This is in noted contrast to the 441 tonnes of carbon dioxide they absorbed between 1993 and 2002.

The change from carbon bank to carbon source is caused by a number of climate related factors including the Mountain Pine Beetle outbreak and an increasing number of forest fires; however, the largest contributing factor is poor forest management. Destructive logging practices like clear-cutting and slash-burning, especially in old-growth forests, are huge contributors to the carbon emissions from B.C. forests. Between 2003 and 2012 emissions from logging were a whopping 520 million tonnes of carbon dioxide

“B.C. forest management is making climate change worse, an alarming situation when our forests should instead be our best ally in the fight against climate change, like forests in many other parts of the world,” said Sierra Club BC campaigner Jens Wieting. “Unless the B.C. government wakes up and takes far-reaching action to increase conservation and improve forest management, our provincial forests will continue to contribute to climate change instead of slowing it down.”

The world’s forests offer us a spectacular service by absorbing carbon and giving us oxygen to breathe. They are also our only viable hope to reverse at least a portion of our carbon emissions. Only by taking immediate climate action will our forest return to being an ally in the fight against global warming. Sierra Club BC is calling on the B.C. government to make forest health a priority. By phasing out fossil fuel subsidies, the B.C. government could make $1 billion available to develop and implement a 5-year forest action plan that would restore the health of our forests.

“Restoring B.C.’s forests so that we are banking carbon rather than withdrawing it is necessary not just for our climate but also for water quality, salmon habitat and forest jobs,” said Wieting. “It won’t be easy but it is possible, if the provincial government shifts subsidies and support from fossil fuels to forestry and other climate solutions. We can create jobs that will reduce emissions, instead of increasing them, slow climate change down instead of speeding it up and support communities, the economy and forests instead of putting them at risk.”

June 17, 2015 marks one year since the federal government announced its approval of Enbridge’s proposed Northern Gateway pipeline.
This June 12-21, 2015, join us in supporting Pull Together, and marking the federal approval anniversary in a Week to End Enbridge.

In removing some of B.C.’s best farmland from the Agricultural Land Reserve, behind closed doors and without democratic debate, the B.C. government has dealt a blow to the ability of B.C. families, especially those in the North, to afford B.C.-grown fruits and vegetables, Sierra Club BC and Peace Valley Environment Association said in a statement.

Sierra Club BC, in association with the BC Sustainable Energy Association and other local groups, wants to celebrate these sustainable solutions and find out more about your community with the Future is HERE! 2015 Alternatives Tour.